* En anglais uniquement
Julius Rudel was one of the best-known American conductors and musical administrators mainly associated with operatic performances. As a child, he was deeply attracted to music, regularly attended the
Vienna Philharmonic concerts and saw some of the great conductors of the age, including
Knappertsbusch,
Furtwängler, and
Walter. He began his formal musical studies at the Academy of Music in Vienna. At the time of the Nazi occupation of Austria, he left the country and completed his musical studies at Mannes School of Music in New York, graduating in 1943. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1944.
After graduation, he was hired on the musical staff of the
New York City Opera, where he helped prepare performances. His debut as a professional conductor was with the
NYCO on November 25, 1944. He remained with the
NYCO for 35 years, becoming its principal conductor and general director in 1957. Under his leadership, the company came to be respected as one of the leading opera companies of the United States. One of his most astute decisions was in engaging soprano
Beverly Sills as its leading singer.
Rudel already had an interest in opera written before the time of
Mozart and in the then-neglected era of Italian bel canto opera. Operas of
Handel,
Donizetti, Bellini, and
Rossini were frequently represented on the
NYCO stage. Their style was also well-suited to the abilities of
Sills and her frequent partner, mezzo-soprano
Marilyn Horne, and made the
New York City Opera's seasons more exciting than the standard fare offered by the rival
Metropolitan Opera Company (which became the
NYCO's neighbor at the Lincoln Center in the 1960s). A feature of his seasons was a strong support for American operas.
During his tenure at the
NYCO,
Rudel also often conducted in major opera centers in Vienna, Munich, Chicago, San Francisco, Paris, Rome, London, Hamburg, Berlin, and even the
Met. He was also the first music director of the Kennedy Center in Washington and of the Wolf Trap Festival. He was music director of the Cincinnati May Festival and the Caramoor Festival.
He left the
City Opera in 1979 in order to have more time for symphonic conducting. He accepted a position as music director of the
Buffalo Philharmonic and frequently conducted the
Orchestra of St. Luke's in New York, with which he recorded works of
Weill,
Schubert, and
Mozart on the MusicMasters label. He also conducted the
Montreal Symphony Orchestra, the
Royal Scottish National Orchestra, and others. Meanwhile, he continued as an opera conductor, appearing at the
Met, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, the Bastille Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, the Royal Opera in Copenhagen, and the Deutsche Oper of Berlin.
He made a number of successful opera recordings and was nominated for Grammy Awards several times, winning once. In 1961, his home nation of Austria presented him a special award for his service to arts and sciences. He was also a Chevalier des Arts et Lettres in France, recipient of awards from Israel and Germany, and holder of several honorary doctorates. In 1996, New York City proclaimed his 75th birthday "
Julius Rudel Day," which
Rudel himself observed by conducting Madama Butterfly at the
Met.